Bael a.k.a.Baal ("lord" or "master") -
In ancient grimoires and Wierus'
Psuedo-Monarchia, he is a
great demon king who commands seventy infernal
legions and rules the eastern side of Hell. These sources also say that he manifests as a creature with three heads,
that of a man, a toad, and a cat. However, according to the cabala, he is not a fallen angel and is the equivalent of
Raphael.

Balam (Balan) - a three-headed (bull, ram, man)
demon with a serpent's tail who is a former member of the
Dominions. He is now a great ruler in Hell who rides naked upon a
bear while commanding forty infernal legions.

Balberith (Berith, Beal, Elberith, Baalberith) -
a
fallen angel
who is a great pontiff and master of ceremonies in the infernal regions.
A former prince of the Cherubim,
he is now the demon who notarizes and witnesses the pacts made between humans and
Satan. His official title, as noted on official
underworld documents, is "scriptor." He is also said to be the entity that took possession of Sister Madeleine at
Aix-en-Provence and told her the names of other devils.

Balkin - in Scot's
Discoverie of Witchcraft and Butler's
Ritual Magic
he is mentioned as an angel who is
invoked
during magick rituals. He is said to be a kind and helpful spirit, assisted by Luridan (a spirit of the home),
who presides as lord and king over the northern mountains.

Ballaton - an angel who is inscribed upon the outer circle of Solomon's pentagram.

Baltazard - a spirit who, according to
The Greater Key of Solomon, is
called upon to aid in obtaining a woman's garter.

Balthial - one of the seventy
Planetary Angels.
He is
invoked
to help humans overcome feelings of jealousy and bitterness,
in fact, according to
3 Enoch he is the only angel who is able to overcome the
demon who rules such emotions.
He is also inspire contentment and peace of
mind in mankind.

Baraqijal - a leading
fallen angel
(one of the "chiefs of ten," according to Enoch) who teaches mortals the secrets of astrology. He is among the
Grigori who mated with human women.

Barattiel (possibly
Ataphiel) -
one of the three great angel princes who holds God's Throne aloft using three fingers.

Barbatos - a
fallen angel who is
also a duke in Hell who commands thirty infernal legions. He is formerly of the
Virtues and he is sometimes
invoked
in black magick rituals. He is called upon to teach one to understand birdsong, reveal the past, and to
tell one their future. He is easily summoned, but only while the sun is in Sagittarius.

Barbelo -
a female
arcon of abundance,
goodness, faith, and integrity. Pray to her to fill you with these gifts and virtues. According to
Gnosticism, this angel second in rank only to the Creator, and the consort of the Cosmocrator. The
Texts of the Saviour say that she is the daughter of
Pistis Sophia, birth mother to the superior angels.

Barman (Bahman and Bahrman) - a Zoroastrian great angel (mihr),
guardian of all of earth's animals, except for man, and the
amesha spenta
from whom all other angels were produced, the first angel. He is also one of the rulers of the thirty angels
who reign over the thirty days of the
month. To the Mohammedans he is Jabriel
(Gabriel) "the mightiest of angels," the angel of
January and of the second
day of each month.

Baruch ("blessed") - chief guardian of the Tree of Life along with
Raphael. In the lore of witchcraft he is one of seven
devils who possessed Sister Seraphica of Loudon.
And, according to an early Ophitic (gnostic) system, he is one of three angels sent by God "to succor the spirit in man."

Barya'il - a chief apocalyptic angel of Islam who resides in the
Seventh Heaven and rules over a myriad of his fellow angels.
According to the Sufi Abu Yazid who encountered him there, he is "of the tallness of the distance of 500 years."
As other angels of lower ranks have done (such as
Lamidh of the
Second Heaven and
Naya'il of the
Fourth), Barya'il offers Abu Yazid
"a kingdom such as no tongue can describe," but he refuses the offer, or bribe, remaining focused
upon his only purpose for ascending to heaven (mir'aj), God.

Batarel (Batariel,
Badariel,
Batrael. Batarjal, Metarel) - one of Enoch's 200
fallen angels
that can be invoked during ceremonial magick.
His name also appears in Talisman 4 of the Sage of the Pyramids.

Bat(h) Kol a.k.a. Bat(h) Qol ("heavenly voice" or "daughter of the voice") -
a female angel who encourages truthful communication and prophecy. She grants insights into the future.
She is a holy guardian angel who is said to have visited Simeon ben Yohai, the second-century sage author of
The Zohar, while he was imprisoned.
Rabbis revere her as the voice of God during the days when prophecy had ceased. Her symbol is the dove,
as us that of the Holy Ghost in the New Testament. She is also said to be "the Voice which called out
to Cain the biblical murderer, 'Where is thy brother Abel?'"

Bealphares - "the noblest carrier that ever did serve any man upon the
earth" is described as a
demon in
Pseudo-Monarchia. In no other
source on infernal spirits does his name appear, so he is, therefore, regarded as being a benign, rather
than evil, spirit.

Bearechet - an angel whose name is inscribed upon the Seal of
The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses.

Beatrice (Portinari) - a fictional angel from Dante's
La Vita Nuova and
The Divine Comedy (specifically the
Paradiso). In this tale Dante sees his love in Paradise as an
angel where she leads him to the Empyrean, one of God's dwellings.

Beelzebub a.k.a. Belzebub, Belzaboul, Beelzeboul, Baalsebul, etc.
("god of flies") - originally a god of Ekron in Philistia in Assyrian lore.
In the cabala, he is
archdemon in charge of the nine infernal hierarchies
that follow the first, which is ruled by either
Satan or
Samael, making him second only to the infernal ruler, himself.
According to Matthew, Mark, and Luke of the Bible, he is "prince of the devils." He fell from the
order of the
Cherubim. Among his titles are "Lord of the Flies" and "Lord of Chaos".
He is a demon of great power that sorcerers have conjured at great risk.

Behemoth - a male monster of chaos (who is part whale, crocodile, and hippopotamus)
and a
fallen angel and demon of the deep who encourages
gluttony and the pleasures of the belly. He was created by God on the fifth day of creation.
He is generally associated with Leviathan,
an equally monstrous female entity. He is often paired with
Rahab, the original angel of the seas, and with the
Angel of Death.

Balial a.k.a. Beliar and Berial - a great
fallen angel, once of the
virtues,
who is described as being the very essence of evil. He is one of
Satan's
most important demons. In
Paradise Lost I, Milton describes him thus: "Belial came last; than whom a
spirit more lewd. Fell not from Heav'n. or more gross to love. Vice it self." Then, in
Paradise Lost II
he says, "A fairer person lost not Heav'n; he seemed/For dignity compos'd and high exploit;" and then quickly adds,
"all was false and hollow." His could also be another name for Sheol (Hell). And, yet another source says
that he is Hell's ambassador to Turkey.

Beliar a.k.a. Belier ("worthless") - a
fallen angel,
often said to be the same as demon
Belial. As such, he often brags about
having been one who "fell among the worthier sort." In all references to this entity he is described as
either being the very personification or symbol of evil itself. In writings about the apocalypse, he is
the prince of darkness, God's ultimate adversary. He is said to be the angel of lawlessness and to have
been created "next after
Lucifer". When asked, in
The Gospel of Bartholomew,
who he is, Beliar responds, "At first I was called
Satanel, which is interpreted as
a messenger of God, but when I rejected the image of god my name was calld Satanas, that is, an angel that keepeth Hell
(Tartarus)....I was formed the first angel...Michael second,
Gabriel third,
Uriel fourth,
Raphael fifth,
Nathanael
sixth....These are the angels of vengeance that were first formed." Some sources say that Beliar was
originally of both the orders of
angels and of
Virtues.
Others say that he was never an angel and that, like
Ahriman,
he has always been "independent of God and God's opposite equal." In short, he is the very epitome of evil.

Bethor - One of seven supreme angels who rule the 196 Olympic
provinces into which Heaven has been divided. He is in charge of 42 of those provinces and commands
kings, princes, dukes, and other royalty, as well as 29,000 angelic legions. He is also said to
"govern all things that are ascribed to
Jupiter."
See
Bathor.

Bualu - one of the eight all-powerful angels who are
summoned during conjurations.
The cabalistic instructions for calling these angels forth are that they "must be called three times
from the four corners of the world with a clear and powerful voice and when the name of each is
pronounced three times, then three sounds must be uttered by the horn." Other angels that are a
part of this group of eight include,
Atuesel,
Ebuhuel,
Tubatlu,
Tulatu,
Labusi, and
Ublisi.

Buchuel - an angel's name inscribed upon an oriental charm
(kamea) used to protect one from evil.

Cahethel - a prince of the eight
Seraphim,
regent of agriculture, and one of the seventy-two
Shemhamphora.
In cabalistic rituals he is often
invoked to aid in crop production.
He corresponds with the angel
Asicat.

Caila - in the
Greater Key of Solomon, one of the angels
invoked during rituals to conjure the
ArchangelUriel. According to the grimoires, Caila is also one
of the four words that God spoke, using his mouth, to Moses. The other three words were
Josta,
Agla, and
Ablati.

Calliel (Caliel) - an angel of the Divine Presence who lives in the
Second Heaven. He is also one of the seventy-two
Shemhamphora and can be
invoked
for immediate help when facing adversity. He corresponds with the angel Tersatosoa or Tepisatosoa.

Camael a.k.a. Camiel, Camiul, Kemuel, Khamael, Camniel, Cancel, Kehemuel, Camuel,
and Chamuel - an angel who presides over beauty, joy, happiness and contentment.
He is also one of the most controversial angels of the celestial hierarchy because he is often confused with
Samael. His name means "He who sees God" and he is the
prince regent of the Powers as well as one of the seven great
Archangels.
He is also the angel of war and the supreme regent of
Mars and
Aries. He controls 12,000 angels of destruction and
tried to prevent God from giving the Torah (Law) to Moses. In the Cabala, he is justice personified and is
identified with the fifth sephira of the Tree of Life,
known as Severity. It is in occult lore that Camael is said to be a
fallen angel, Count Palatine,
to be specific. This, however, could be a result of him being mistaken for Samael who really is a destructive
force of the infernal order and not of the Divine Presence.

Carreau - the angel who, along with the
demonBaruch, possessed the body of Sister Seraphica of Loudon.
In Gustav Davidson's
A Dictionary of Angels, he is said to have "guarded a drop of water
that bewitched the sister's stomach.

Cassiel a.k.a. Casiel - the supreme regent of
Saturn and
Capricorn.
He is also one of the three angels of
Saturday. He is the angel of
solitudes and tears among whose duties it is to bring forth "the unity of the Eternal Kingdom." He is the Sarim,
or prince regent, of the
Powers but only a regent of the
Seventh Heaven. He is occasionally said to be the
angel of temperance. One of a trio of angels that includes
Machatan and
Uriel.
In the
Picture Museum of Sorcery, Magic and Alchemyis a reproduction of a page out of the
Book of Spirits that shows how to
conjure Cassiel.
And in both
The Magus and the
Book of Spirits are his
sigil
and his signature. In
The Magus Barrett dubs him Cassiel Mocoton and pictures him as a bearded jinn
atop a dragon, yet in
The Magus II, he says that Cassiel and Mocoton are two separate entities,
in which instance both are rulers of Saturday.

Chalkatoura - one of the nine angels in
The Gospel of Bartholomew who "run throughout the heavenly and earthly places."

Chalkydri (Kalkydra) - the Enochian twelve-winged
archangels who reign over the flying elements of the sun.
They are connected to the phoenixes and the orders of the
Seraphim
and the
Cherubim. They reside in the
Fourth Heaven and burst into song as the sun rises.
They are said to be
demons in Gnosticism and Charles' introduction to
Enoch II, where he describes them as "monstrous serpents with the heads of crocodiles" and as "natural
products of the Egyptian imagination."

Chayyiel H a.k.a. Chayyiliel - the chief of the angels of the Merkabah, or
Divine Chariot. In the Cabala,
these angels are called the Hayyoth, or Chayoth, and identified as members of the
Cherubim. According to Enoch, Chayyiel
is so immense and powerful that he could swallow the Earth in one gulp, if he so desired. He is also in charge
of the celestial choirs and punishes, with fire lashings, the angels who are out of time in the singing of the
Holy Trisagion. Before Chayyliel "all the children of heaven do tremble."

Chochma a.k.a. Hokhmah ("wisdom") - the first thing that God created and
the only one of his celestial ideas to have actually become personified. That personification, Chochma, is
the second of the holy Sephira whose living form is the angel
Raziel.

Chochmael (Hochmael) -
an angel of Transcendental Magic who is
invoked during conjurations.

Cosel - an angel who serves
Gamiel
as a ruler of the first
hour of the night.

Cosmiel - the angel from
Oedipus Egyptiacus who was a companion to
the seventeenth-century Jesuit Athanasius Kircher while he was on his inter-planetary journey.

Cosmocrator - in Gnosticism, he is the regent of the world under the name
Diabolus (the Devil), which immediately associates him with
Astaroth and the
infernal regions.
But, he and his consort,
Barbelso are said to come together and "sing
the praises of the light," which would imply that Cosmocrator is not entirely evil.

Crocel a.k.a. Crokel, Procel, Pucel, Pocel - a
fallen angel, formerly of the
Powers,
and a duke in the infernal regions where he is in command of 48 legions. He told Solomon that he hopes to,
one day, return to his former glory. Until then he teaches man geometry and the liberal arts.
If he is the same angel as Procel, his sigil appears in
The Book of Ceremonial Magic by Waite.

Cukbiel - an angel used in the
binding spell,
"Binding the Tongue of the Ruler." both of which can be found in the Syrian text of invocation rituals,
The Book of Protection and Budge's
Amulets and Talismans.

Daath ("knowledge") - according to the Cabala, this is a hidden
sephira in between the first and second spheres.
It represents knowledge and has intensely sexual connotations. This is, however a spiritual
sexuality that represents divine union and ecstasy. However, according to
The Wisdom of the Kabbalah, it is a combination of the second and third sephiroth.

Dalkiel - an
infernal prince, regent of Sheol
(Hell) and assistant to
Duma, the angel of the "stillness of death."
He works in the seventh lodge of Hell where he is responsible for punishing ten nations.

Demiurge - The great
archon (ruler) in Gnosticism.
To Valentinus he is "an angel like God," equated with the God of the Jews. He has always been connected with
Mithras. And, in
The Study of the Kabalah, Demiourgos is the Greek's name for
Metatron. One of Demiurge's titles is
"Architect of the Universe," which suggests that it was he, and not God, who created the world, at the moment of
Ain Soph, the Unknowable.

Didnaor - an angel listed in
The Book of the Angel Raziel (Sefer Raziel).

Dina a.k.a.
Yefefiah and
Iofiel -
a Cabalistic
guardian of the Torah (Law) and
of wisdom who resides in the
Seventh Heaven.
When the world was first created, she taught humans seventy languages. Her role is that
of a guiding and teaching angel who inspires mortals to pursue wisdom, knowledge and love of learning.

Duma (in Aramaic, his name means "silence") -
the
guardian angel of Egypt, and a prince of Hell
who commands thousands of the
angels of destruction
and has 12,000
myriads of servants who are charged with punishing sinners.
The angel of silence and the stillness of death, and the angel of vindication. He is also said to be the guardian
of the fourteenth gate in Hell. And, according to I.B. Singer's
Short Friday, he is a "thousand-eyed
angel of death, armed with a fiery rod or flaming sword."

Dynamis - one of the seven
aeons who, like
Pistis Sophia gave birth to the superior angels.
He is the gnostic chief male personification of power to Pistis Sophia's chief female personification of wisdom.
Dynamis is also thought to be one of the many names of
Metatron and he is
also said to be a member of the
Mights.

Eblis a.k.a. Iblis and Haris - the Muslim equivalent of the Christian
Satan whose name means "despair." Before his fall
he was a treasurer in Heaven. In the Asian romance
Vahek Eblis is described as follows: "Before his fall he was called
Azazel. When Adam was created,
God commanded all the angels to worship him, but Eblis refused." By responding with, according to
The Legends of the Jews, "Me thou hast created of
smokeless fire, and shall I reverence a creature made of dust?" Upon hearing this God made Eblis into a
shetan,
a
devil, and thus he became their father.
The Arabs have three classifications of spirits: angels (good), jinn (good and evil), and demons (evil).
In the Arab holy book, the Koran, Eblis is a jinn. It is even written that their God, Mohammed, taught
Eblis some of the
suras (holy passages) in the Koran.

Ebriel - the ninth of the ten unholy sephiroth of the
Qliphoth or Infernal Tree.

Ebuhuel - one of the eight omnipotent angels of
The Sixth and Seventh
Books of Moses. He is also an angel who is called upon in cabalistic
conjurations.

Ecanus (Elkanah) - an angelic scribe who inspires writers.
He is also one of the five angels who transcribed the 204 books of Ezra. Of the books, seventy
contained esoteric knowledge that was only to be revealed to Jewish wisemen, the remainder were for public use.

Eiael - an angel who teaches the occult sciences and has
the power to prolong human life. To
invoke him, speak
the fourth verse of Psalm 36. He is also one of the seventy-two
Shemhamphora.
He is similar to the angel
Abiou.

Eisheth Zenunim - in
The Zohar,
a book of cabalistic thought, she is one of the four concubines of
Samael's
and mother of the best of the
Chiva, not to be confused with the Hindu God, Shiva.
She is also know as "the harlot" and the mother of prostitution. Samael's other three concubines and angels of
prostitution are
Agrat bat Mahlaht,
Lilith, and
Naamah.

El - one of the
secret names of God
that is connected to the fourth
sephira in the Tree of Life. It means "God"
or "angel" and is also the ending of most angels' names, where it means "son of God," The pluralized form
of el is
elohim. According to the Canaanites,
El is the angel who fathered Shahar and Shalim by a mortal woman. This, of course, would make him a
fallen angel.

Eladel - one of the seventy-two angels who rule the seventy-two
quinaries of the degrees of the
zodiac.

Electors - the seven
planetary spirits
or angels of Hell, an idea that stems from the Akkadians. The names of these angels, according to
The Testament of Solomon, are: Aciel, servant to Raphael; Anael, servant to Haniel; Ariel,
servant to Michael; Barbiel, servant to Zaphiel; Ganael, servant to Apadiel and Camael; Marbuel,
servant to Gabriel; Mephistophile, servant to Zadkiel. Some authorities classify them as
infernal forces. In Agrippa's list the names are
the same except that
Bludon and
Apadiel
replace Anael and Ganael, respectively.

Elijah, known to the Greeks as Elias ("my God is Jehovah" -
In the Old Testament there were two Hebrew patriarchs who were taken up to heaven while they were still alive:
Enoch and Elijah. Enoch and Elijah were both given a ride in a chariot of fire that was drawn by fiery horses.
Enoch became
Metatron, Elijah may have became
Sandalphon. Another version says that Elijah was already
"one of the greatest and mightiest of the fiery angel host" to begin with. Another tale tells of
Elijah defeating the angel of death in battle only being stopped short of destroying him by God himself
(for God still had a plan for that particular angel). According to
Pirke Rabbi Eliezer, Elijah is
the "psychopomp whose duty is to stand at the crossways of Paradise and guide the pious to their appointed places."
The Hasidic Rabbi Elimelekh names Elijah, as Sandalphon, the
"Angel of the Covenant".
In Jewish Passover festivals, a cup for Elijah is filled with wine and there is a place left at the table (the seder)
for him as "the expected guest." In Blake's
Marriage of Heaven and Hell, Elijah is described as being both an
angel and a
devil. "I beheld the Angel who stretched out his arms
embracing the flame of fire, and he was consumed and arose as Elijah."
Blake then says, "This Angel, who is now become a Devil, is my particular friend."

Elohi - an angel of Fire
consecration
whose name, when invoked, dries out the seas and rivers by divine command.
In Solomonic rites it is the Master of the Art who must invoke him.
Elohi is also fifth of the celestial hierarchies who answer to the ten
names of God.

En Suf a.k.a. Ain Soph ("the boundless") -
the cabalistic personification he who is the supreme, invisible, unimaginable creator of the universe.
The Godly essence that became personalized in the Partsufim.

Enoch-Metatron - Enoch is said to have written 366 books during his earthly existence.
There then came a time in his life when, as an old man, he was transported, as a still living being, to heaven.
While visiting on high it is said that he was transformed into the "king over all the angels,"
Metatron. Metatron is the twin brother of
Sandalphon (Elijah transformed),
both of whom have 365,000 eyes and thirty-six pairs of wings.
Enoch was also the inventor of astronomy and arithmetic, and legend ties him to
Behemoth.

Eros - his name means "erotic love." Also known as the Roman god,
Cupid, he is the Greek god of love, and is also
summoned
by the name of
Theliel, in ceremonial magick, as the angel of love.
Invoking his name will secure the love of someone desired.